Home » Archived APSU News » Military Alumni & Friends Day welcomes APSU staff, community members to Fort Campbell

Military Alumni & Friends Day welcomes APSU staff, community members to Fort Campbell

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Fort Campbell not only plays an important role in the efforts
of the United States military, but also serves as a pillar of the local Clarksville
community. With the goal of thanking community and academic leaders, Fort Campbell
opened its doors Friday, April 24 for Military Alumni & Friends Day.

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Fort Campbell not only plays an important role in the efforts
of the United States military, but also serves as a pillar of the local Clarksville
community. With the goal of thanking community and academic leaders, Fort Campbell
opened its doors Friday, April 24 for Military Alumni & Friends Day.

“We here all appreciate what you all in the community do for us … (the community)
really bends over backwards to support us,” Bob Jenkins, Fort Campbell director of
public affairs, said. “There is a really symbiotic relationship between Fort Campbell,
Clarksville and Austin Peay State University.”

Dr. Alisa White, APSU president, was joined on the tour by APSU staff and alumni.
Community leaders including Sherry Pickering and Stacey Hopwood with the Montgomery
County Veterans Coalition also took part in the event.

The group spent the morning and afternoon touring the base, led by representatives
from Fort Campbell. Included was a visit to The Austin Peay Center at Fort Campbell
to see the University’s efforts as the only institution of higher learning in America
with a branch campus on a military installation.

Visitors were also taken to 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) headquarters, where
they were given the chance to explore the division’s rich history, including its Medal
of Honor recipients and artifacts from its role in nearly every major conflict since
World War II.

The group also got a hands-on look at the installation’s Engagement Center, which
features an indoor simulation firing range with M16 rifles. Participants had a chance
to practice their aim with target shooting, as well as a run-through of the military’s
“shoot-or-don’t shoot” training exercise.

While at HQ, Brad Ninness, garrison executive officer, gave attendees a presentation
on the work being done at Fort Campbell. More than just a military installation, Fort
Campbell is the largest employer in Tennessee and Kentucky, with an economic impact
totaling nearly $4 billion in payroll, retirement and other disbursements. Fort Campbell
also employs nearly 40,000 people between military and civilian employees.

The installation also invests heavily in higher education, spending nearly $9 million
in 2014 in tuition assistance to current and former military.

“Our vision at Ft. Campbell is to make it the best soldier and family experience
possible,” Ninness said. “Our motto is ‘Work. Retrain. Return.’ … 70 percent of our
military retirees end up in the local area between Clarksville, Hopkinsville and Nashville.”

For more information on The Austin Peay Center at Fort Campbell, visit online at www.apsu.edu/apfc,
or call at 931-221-1400. For additional information on Fort Campbell, visit online
at www.campbell.army.mil, or call the public affairs office at 270-798-3025.